The Michigan Daily-Monday, April 4, 1988-Page 3 Storm damages architecture bldg, 'U' Towers By ERIC LEMONT A tornado that passed through Washtenaw County yesterday missed campus, but strong winds and rain blew roofing off of the west side of the Art and Architecture Building, downed power in the Hill dorm area, and caused minor damage to Univer- sity Towers. Several architecture graduate stu- dents' projects were damaged and a few were destroyed when winds es- timated at 70 mph detached the seal of a water drain on the building's roof. Part of the roof was also blown on a courtyard and an adjacent park- ing lot Building Director Jim Byrd said. "It looks like it blew off between 100 to 150 square feet of roofing," said Byrd, surveying the building's damage after the storm. The storm - ripping shingles off roofs, uprooting trees and downing power poles - "leapfrogged" over the county, alternately touching the ground as a tornado and then rising into the air as a funnel cloud, said Denise Wirtz, of the county's Office of Emergency Management. In Ann Arbor, the storm caused minor damage to the front entrance of University Towers, leaving a light fixture: and metal supports hanging from the ceiling. "We were concerned here for a while," said University Tower Resi. dent Advisor Dan McCarvillet "there's not too much of a chance ol a tornado missing this building.' McCarville said no one was injured or evacuated during the storm which hit at about 5:30 p.m. Later last night, the Hill Dorm area reported a power outage, al- though a campus security officer didn't know whether the storm di- rectly caused the power failure. The Markley, Stockwell, and Moshe( Jordan dormitories, the Med Sct Complex, and University Terrac4 housing lost power shortly after 9 p.m. for about 45 minutes, he said. Daily Staffer Lawrence Rosenberg4 contributed to this report UM News in The Daily 764-0552 Daily Photo by ROBIN LOZNAK A tree lays in the driveway of Delta Tau Delta fraternity on Geddes, the victim of a severe thunderstorm that swept through Washtenaw county yesterday afternoon. Up to 70 mph winds damaged University Towers and the Art and Architecture building on North campus where parts of the roof were torn off. A tornado touched down several times in Washtenaw county. Rebel leaders arrested in Philippine crackdown MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Communist rebels suffered a major setback with the the recent arrest of their top leaders, but military officials and analysts say the insurgents are from beaten. Through their 19-year rebellion, the guerrillas have demonstrated remarkable resilience. Despite harsh crackdowns, their influence has spread from the countryside to urban centers, attacks have stepped up and captured leaders have been replaced immediately. ,,President Corazon Aquino, who has vowed to crush the insurgency before her term expires in 1992, hailed last Tuesday's arrests of the New People's Army commander and the Communist Party's No. 2 man as the beginning of the end. "It clearly demonstrates that we have turned the tide and are winning the war against the Communist's insurgency," she said in a statement. But military officials and others say the president may have spoken too soon, although they acknowledge that the arrests were a big blow to 25,000-strong guerrilla army. "It will disturb some of their programs," Brig. Gen. Rodolfo Biazon, Manila area commander, said of the arrests. "But to say that this means the defeat of the Communist movement may not entirely be correct because we are fighting an idea, and the idea is still there." The Ecumenical Campus Center Presents The Annual Merrill Lecture Dr. Parker J. Palmer speaks on 'The Violence of Our Knowledge: A Spirituality for Peace and Education" Tuesday, April 5, 1988 7:30 p.m. at the Modern Language Building Auditorium 4. For more information, please call 662-5529. CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 t CENTER FOR WST ERNEUROPEAN STUDIES Learn Swedish in Sweden at the Uppsala International Summer Session Earn 8 in-residence credits for 8 weeks of intensive Swedish (beginning, intermediate, or advanced). The program runs for 9 weeks, June 26 - August 19. This will be two four-week sessions with one week vacation between them. For more information, contact the Center for Western European Studies 764-4311 or visit the office at 5208 Angell Hall CLB Continued from Page 1 week to 10 days. MSA has not yet studied the'doc- ument, said new MSA President Michael Phillips. He said that the document will go to the assembly's Student Rights Committee and that an opinion will be ready by next Tuesday. Dobbins said he had to "put on my bo-xing gloves" to prevent SACUA members from revising de- tails of the document, but in the end the group was "immensely apprecia- tive of what CLB has done" in draft- ing the document. "I put on my boxing gloves and convinced each one of the other members not to revise it," he told the board. Among some of the revi- sions proposed were reordering of paragraphs and some minor syntax changes. The statement replaces a similar document, which CLB chair Prof. Peter Railton calls "insufficiently sensitive to protest." That version, adopted in 1977, emphasized the rights of speakers "Expression of diverse points of view is of the highest importance, not only for those who espouse a cause or position and then defend it," the preamble to the document reads, "but also for those who hear and pass judgment on that defense." The guidelines recommend rights of speakers and protestors to be ob- served, including: -allowing a speech to continue even if disruption has been threat- ened; -prohibiting "undue interference" with a speech by audience members. This point permits shouting, heck- ling, and displaying signs; -encouraging a dialogue between a speaker and audience members; -providing security forces to "protect the personal security and rights of free expression of all par- ties." s A103 Art and reason When Mark and I decided to spend the weekend at his mother's house, I never imagined I would be walking into a mouse's nightmare. There were THEL ST What's happening in Ann Arbor today cats everywhere. Cat plaques, cat statues, cat clocks, even a cat mat. I couldn't begin to dupli- cate her collection of kitty litter if I spent a year at a garage sale. Conspicuously absent, however, was a real cat. Strange, I thought, and began to fear that a weekend with cat woman could be a lot less than purr-fect. But then she came home, and Mark introduced her. She was dressed surprisingly well-no leopard pants. In fact, you could say she was the cat's meow, but I'd rather not. She offered me a cup of Dutch Choc- olate Mint. Now that was something I could relate to. Then she brought it out in the most beautiful, distinctly unfeline china I'd ever seen. As we sipped, I found out that Mrs. Campbell has my same weakness for chocolate, loves the theater as much as I do, but, incredibly; never saw "Cats." So Mark and I are taking her next month. r:>. Speakers Rabbi Daniel S y m e - "Finding God: Ten Jewish Responses." 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Michael Jeanneret - "Grotesques et corps monstreux" (Montaigne). 4:10 p.m., MLB, Fourth Floor Commons. Prof. Stephen Lee - "A Solid State Chemist Looks at Carbon," 4 p.m., Chemistry Building, room MLB, lecture theatre 1. Meetings The Public Relations Club - final session with Kay Erdman. 4:30 p.m., Frieze Bldg., room 2035. Women Students Network - monthly brown bag lunch. Noon, Center for Continuing Education of Women, corner of N. University and S. Thayer streets. I I